- (1967) Book: "Hard Candy: A Book of Stories" (New York: New Directions Publishing Corp. ISBN 0811202216)
- (1975) Novel: "Moise and the World of Reason" (New York: Simon & Schuster, ISBN 0671219820)
- (1994) Book: "Collected Stories (A New Directions Book)" (New York: New Directions Publishing Corp., ISBN 0811212696)
- (2002) Book: "Collected Poems" (New York: New Directions Publishing Corp., ISBN 0811215083)
- Playwright: "Camino Real"
- (6/19/71) Television: Appeared on the NBC talk show program The Irv Kupcinet Show (1953). Guests included Williams; Charles Evers, mayor of Fayette, Miss; Rep. John Conyers (D-Mich); Jerry Bruno discussing his campaign work with Presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson and Sen. Robert F. Kennedy; actress Carolyn Jones; film director Frank Capra; Vietnam veteran John O'Neill (an advocate of American involvement in Indochina); and author Herman Raucher ("Summer of '42"). This was a 90-minute program.
- (1959) Stage: Wrote "Sweet Bird of Youth", produced on Broadway. Drama. Incidental music by Paul Bowles. Scenic / Lighting Design by Jo Mielziner. Costume Design by Anna Hill Johnstone. Costumes for Miss Page created by Theoni V. Aldredge. Assistant Scenic Design: Hugh Hardy. Associate Designer to Mr. Mielziner: John Harvey. Directed by Elia Kazan. Martin Beck Theatre: 10 Mar 1959-30 Jan 1960 (375 performances). Cast: Sidney Blackmer (as "Boss Finley"), Paul Newman (as "Chance Wayne"), Geraldine Page (as "Princess Kosmonopolis"), Martine Bartlett, Kenneth Blake, Hilda Brawner, Bruce Dern (as "Stuff"), Duke Farley, Ron Harper, Diana Hyland (as "Heavenly Finney"), James Jeter, Monica May, Charles McDaniel, John Napier, Logan Ramsey, Patricia Ripley, Madeleine Sherwood, Glenn Stensel, Earl Sydnor, Rip Torn (as "Tom Junior"), Charles Tyner, Milton J. Williams. Produced by Cheryl Crawford. Understudy: M'el Dowd (as "Princess Kosmonopolis"). NOTE: Filmed as Sweet Bird of Youth (1962), Sweet Bird of Youth (1989).
- (1977) Playwright: "The Red Devil Battery Sign"
- Playwright: "Ten Blocks on the Camino Real" (filmed as Ten Blocks on the Camino Real (1966))
- Playwright: "Hello From Bertha"
- Playwright: "Talk To Me Like the Rain"
- Playwright: "Bourbon Street Blues" (filmed as Bourbon Street Blues (1979))
- Playwright: "The Strangest Kind of Romance"
- Playwright: "Night of the Iguana" (filmed as The Night of the Iguana (1964), The Night of the Iguana (2000))
- Playwright: "The Yellow Bird"
- Playwright: "The Glass Menagerie" (filmed as CBS Playhouse: The Glass Menagerie (1966), The Glass Menagerie (1973), Sirça Kümes (1977), The Glass Menagerie (1950), The Glass Menagerie (1987))
- Playwright: "Suddenly Last Summer" (filmed as Suddenly, Last Summer (1959), Suddenly, Last Summer (1993))
- Playwright: "A Streetcar Named Desire" (filmed as A Streetcar Named Desire (1951), A Streetcar Named Desire (1984), A Streetcar Named Desire (1995))
- (1951) Stage: Wrote "The Rose Tattoo", produced on Broadway. Drama. Incidental music by David Diamond. Scenic Design by Boris Aronson. Costume Design by Rose Bogdanoff. Lighting Design by Charles Elson. Directed by Daniel Mann. Martin Beck Theatre: 3 Feb 1951-27 Oct 1951 (306 performances). Cast: Maureen Stapleton (as "Serafina Delle Rose"), Eli Wallach (as "Alvaro Mangiacavallo"), Martin Balsam (as "Man"), Daisy Belmore (as "The Strega"), Robert Carricart (as "Father De Leo"; final Broadway role), Andrew Duggan (as "Doctor"; Broadway debut), Nancy Franklin (as "Teresa"), Jane Hoffman (as "Flora"), Eddie Hyans (as "Salesman'), Dorrit Kelton (as "Miss Yorke"), Phyllis Love (as "Rosa Delle Rose"), Augusta Merighi (as "Peppina"), Sal Mineo (credited as Savatore Mineo; as "Salvatore"; Broadway debut), Don Murray (as "Jack Hunter"; Broadway debut), Vivian Nathan (as "Violetta"), Judy Ratner (as "Vivi"), Rossana San Marco (as "Giuseppina"), Penny Santon (as "Mariella"), Sonia Sorel (as "Estelle Hohengarten"), David Stewart (as "Man"), Florence Sundstrom (as "Bessie"), Salvatore Taormina (as "Bruno"), Ludmila Toretzka (as "Assunta"). NOTE: Filmed as The Rose Tattoo (1955).
- (1968) Stage: Wrote "The Seven Descents of Myrtle", produced on Broadway. Scenic / Lighting Design by Jo Mielziner. Costume Design by Jane Greenwood. Directed by José Quintero. Ethel Barrymore Theatre: 27 Mar 1968- 20 Apr 1968 (29 performances + 2 previews that began on 25 Mar 1968). Cast: Brian Bedford (as "Lot"), Harry Guardino (as "Chicken"), Estelle Parsons (as "Myrtle"). Produced by David Merrick. Associate Producer: Samuel Liff.
- Playwright: "The Milk Train Doesn't Stop Here Anymore" (filmed as Boom! (1968))
- Playwright: "This Property Is Condemned" (filmed as This Property Is Condemned (1966), Three Plays by Tennessee Williams: Moony's Kid Don't Cry/The Last of My Solid Gold Watches/This Property Is Condemned (1958))
- (1960) Stage Play: Period of Adjustment. Written by Tennessee Williams. Lighting and Scenic Design by Jo Mielziner. Directed by George Roy Hill. Helen Hayes Theatre: 10 May 1960- 4 Mar 1961 (132 performances + 2 previews). Cast: Barbara Baxley, James Daly, Robert Webber, Lester Mack, Rosemary Murphy, Nancy Pollock, Helen Martin (as "Maude Carter"), Charles McDaniel. Produced by Cheryl Crawford. Note: Filmed by Marten Pictures [distributed by MGM] as Period of Adjustment (1962).
- Playwright: "Summer and Smoke" (filmed as Summer and Smoke (1961))
- (1957) Stage: Wrote "Orpheus Descending", produced on Broadway. Drama. Incidental music by Chuck Wayne. Incidental music arranged by John Mehegan. Music for "Heavenly Grass" by Paul Bowles. Lyrics for "Heavenly Grass" by Tennessee Williams. Scenic Design by Boris Aronson. Costume Design by Lucinda Ballard. Lighting Design by A.H. Feder. Directed by Harold Clurman. Martin Beck Theatre: 21 Mar 1957-18 May 1957 (68 performances). Cast: R.G. Armstrong (as "Sheriff Talbott"), Virgilia Chew (as "Nurse Porter"), David Clarke (as "Dog Hamma"), Crahan Denton (as "Jabe Torrance"), Elizabeth Eustis (as "Dolly Hamma"), Mary Farrell (as "Sister Temple"), Nell Harrison (as "Eva Temple"), Albert Henderson (as "1st Man"), Warren J. Kemmerling (as "Pee Wee Binnings"), John Marriott (as "Uncle Pleasant"), Janice Mars (as "Woman"), Cliff Robertson (as "Val Xavier"), Joanna Roos (as Vee Talbott"), Jane Rose (as "Beulah Binnings"), Lois Smith (as "Carol Cutrere"), Maureen Stapleton (as "Lady Torrance"), Beau Tilden (as "Mr. Dubinsky"), Charles Tyner (as "2nd Man"), Robert Webber (as "David Cutrere"). Produced by The Producers Theatre and Robert Whitehead. NOTE: Filmed as Orpheus Descending (1990), The Fugitive Kind (1960).
- (1955) Stage: Wrote "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof", produced on Broadway. Drama. Scenic / Lighting Design by Jo Mielziner. Costume Design by Lucinda Ballard. Assistant Designer to Jo Mielziner: John Harvey. Assistant to Lucinda Ballard: Florence Klotz. Directed by Elia Kazan. Morosco Theatre: 24 Nov 1955-17 Nov 1956 (695 performances). Cast: Barbara Bel Geddes (as "Maggie"), Burl Ives (as "Big Daddy"), Mildred Dunnock (as "Big Mama"), Ben Gazzara (as "Brick"), R.G. Armstrong (as "Dr. Baugh"), Janice Dunn, Seth Edwards (as "Sonny"), Maxwell Glanville, Pauline Hahn (as "Dixie"), Pat Hingle (as "Gooper / Brother Man"), Brownie McGhee, Darryl Richard, Madeleine Sherwood, Eva Vaughn Smith, Fred Stewart (as "Rev. Tooker"), Sonny Terry, Musa Williams. Produced by The Playwrights' Company (Maxwell Anderson, Robert Anderson, Elmer Rice, Robert E. Sherwood, Roger L. Stevens, John F. Wharton). NOTE: Filmed as Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1958), Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1984), Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1976)
- Playwright: "Let Me Listen"
- Playwright: "I Can't Imagine Tomorrow"
- Playwright: "Eccentricities of a Nightingale" (filmed as Eccentricities of a Nightingale (1976))
- Playwright: "Mooney's Kid Don't Cry" (filmed as Three Plays by Tennessee Williams: Moony's Kid Don't Cry/The Last of My Solid Gold Watches/This Property Is Condemned (1958))
- Playwright: "A Lovely Sunday for Creve Coeur"
- Playwright: "The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone" (filmed as The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone (1961), The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone (2003))
- Playwright: "Not About Nightingales".
- (1971) Stage: Wrote "The Glass Menagerie," performed at the Greenwich Theatre in England with Helen Cherry and Steven Berkoff.
- (1974) Stage: Wrote "A Streetcar Named Desire," performed at London's Piccadilly Theatre with Claire Bloom, Martin Shaw, Joss Ackland. Directed by Edwin Sherin.
- (1978) Stage: Wrote "Vieux Carre," performed at the Piccadilly Theatre in London, England with Sylvia Miles, Karl Johnson, Di Trevis, Rich Kane, Betty Hardy, Jonathan Kent. Directed by Keith Hack.
- (1991) Stage: Wrote "The Rose Tattoo," performed at the Playhouse Theatre in London, England, with Julie Walters CBE, Kent Stott and Patricia Hayes OBE. Directed by Sir Peter Hall CBE.
- (1969) Stage: Wrote "The Rose Tattoo," performed at the Ivanhoe Theatre in Chicago, Illinois, with Rita Moreno (Joseph Jefferson Award for Best Guest Artist) and directed by George Keathley (Joseph Jefferson Award for Best Director).
- (1973) Stage: Wrote "A Streetcar Named Desire," performed at the Ivanhoe Theatre in Chicago, Illinois with, James Broderick and Rochelle Oliver, directed by George Keathley.
- (1973) Stage: Wrote "Suddenly Last Summer," performed at the Ivanhoe Theatre in Chicago, Illinois with Katharine Houghton, Allen Carlsen and Sylvia Sidney. Directed by George Keathley.
- (1975) Stage: Wrote "Sweet Bird of Youth," performed at the Academy Festival Theatre in Chicago, IL, with Christopher Walken and Irene Worth. Directed by Edwin Sherin. Costume design by Laura Crow. Lighting Design by Lowell Achiziger.
- (1977) Stage: Wrote "The Glass Menagerie," performed at the Marriott Theatre in Chicago, IL. Cast included Owen Sullivan.
- (1978) Stage: Wrote "The Night of the Iguana," performed at the Goodman Theatre in Chicago, Illinois. Cast and crew included Robert Thompson and Joseph Nieminski (also scenic designer).
- (1979) Stage: Wrote "The Glass Menagerie," performed at the Steppenwolf Theatre in Chicago, Illinois. Cast included Anne Edwards, Laurie Metcalf and Terry Kinney.
- (1982) Stage: Wrote "The Glass Menagerie," performed at the Northlight Theatre in Chicago, Illinois, with Tom Irwin.
- (1992) Stage: Wrote "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof," was performed at the Zebra Crossing Theatre in Chicago, Illinois, with Adrianne Curry in the cast.
- (1994) Stage: Wrote "The Night of the Iguana," performed at the Goodman Theatre in Chicago, IL, with Cherry Jones and Will Petersen in the cast. The crew included Loy Arcenas (scenic designer), James F. Ingalls (lighting designer), and Richard Woodbury (sound designer).
- (1995) Stage: Wrote "A Streetcar Named Desire," performed at the Shattered Globe Theatre in Chicago, IL, with Rebecca Jordan in the cast. Louis Contey was scenic designer.
- (1996) Stage: Wrote "The Glass Menagerie," performed at the Raven Theatre Company in Chicago, Illinois, with Larry Grimm in the cast. Michael Menendian was scenic designer.
- (1997) Stage: Wrote "A Streetcar Named Desire," performed at the Steppenwolf Theatre Company in Chicago, IL, with Laila Robins in the cast. The crew included Kevin Rigdon (lighting designer) and Rob Milburn (sound designer).
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content